MSNBC's Chris Jansing featured the liberal Jonathan Capehart on
Wednesday to attack a newly released Sarah Palin video as
"anti-Semitic." The Washington Post editorial page writer berated Palin
for complaining about the media's attempts to link conservative speech
to last week's shooting in Arizona.

In the video, the former Alaska governor rejected this as a "blood libel." Capehart smeared, "...That
phrasing, that phrase is incredibly anti-Semitic. And no one is calling
Sarah Palin an anti-Semite but for her to use that language a lot of
people think she has dug a deep hole even deeper."

However, the National Review's Jim Geraghty pointed
to an October 30, 2008 Ann Coulter column: Capehart's Washington Post
colleague Eugene Robinson complained about "...The blood libel against
black men concerning the defilement of the flower of Caucasian
womanhood." Was Mr. Robinson using anti-Semitic language? Should he have
been "more careful," as Capehart instructed Palin to be?

Additionally, another MSNBC contributor, Mike Barnicle, used the phrase
on October 31, 2006: "The problem for Kerry here is that two years ago,
Joe, he did not talk like that when he was undergoing a blood libel by
the Swift Boat people." Was he being vaguely anti-Semitic?

Palin's use of the charged phrase "blood libel" - which refers to the
anti-Semitic accusation from the Middle Ages that Jews killed Christian
children to use their blood to make matzo for Passover - touched off an
immediate backlash.

Capehart even asserted that Palin's 2012 presidential chances could now
be imperiled. He speculated, " Did she provide words that aided in that
healing or did she provide words that only served to inflame the
conversation?"

A partial transcript of the January 12 segment, which aired at 11:32am EST, follows:

CHRIS JANSING: I want to bring in Jonathan Capehart, MSNBC contributor
and Washington Post editorial writer. And I saw that you wrote about
this. She says blood libel insights hatred. Strong language. What do you
think about this video, Jonathan?

JONATHAN
CAPEHART: Well, overall, I think the video was a nearly eight-minute
defense of her actions and of herself. In my piece, I write that she
says, "Don't blame me, blame the shooter and then blame the media. All I
was trying to do was exercising my right to dissent and any criticism
of me doing that is stifling free speech." And, you know, times like
this call for statesmen. Calls- It is a time that calls for people to
come together and to try to, you know, move everyone along and what
Sarah Palin has done is just continuing her defensive crouch. And one
other thing, you know, Chris, she used the phrasing blood libel and, you
know, all over Twitter, all over journalism circles and you go on the
web and instantly people picked up on that because that phrasing, that
phrase is incredibly anti-Semitic. And no one is calling Sarah Palin an
anti-Semite but for her to use that language a lot of people think she
has dug a deep hole even deeper. She should have been more careful.

JANSING: Let me just play another clip. Again, eight minutes of video, but here's another little part of it.

SARAH PALIN: Acts of monstrous criminalities stand on their own. They
begin and end with the criminals who commit them, not collectively with
all the citizens of a state. Not with those who listen to talk radio.
Not with maps of swing districts used by both sides of the aisle.

JANSING: You know, the argument is being made right now as we look
ahead already to 2012 and possible candidates that they will be judged
on the way they respond to the most obvious tonight here with President
Obama, but do you think people like Sarah Palin and others that this
will be remembered. This video will be looked at by voters?

CAPEHART: Yes, it will be. Whether she gets into the race or not for
2012, if she does, people will look at that and critique that for how
did Sarah Palin respond during a national crisis, if you will? At a time
when people were looking for healing and for solace. Did she provide words that aided in that healing or did she provide words that only served to inflame the conversation? I
think Sarah Palin missed an incredible opportunity to go from being
someone who hides behind Twitter and Facebook to reach people to being
an actual statesperson who, you know, deserves to be talked about as
someone who can possibly sit in the oval office. You know, that's what
she wants people to think. But a performance like the one in that video
today doesn't, it doesn't strike the right tone. They weren't the right
words. She did not follow the advice from conservative commentator David
Frum, which I thought was excellent. If she wanted someone to follow,
you know, the speech that Speaker Boehner gave on the floor today, right
tone, right words, a statesman.

- Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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